Thursday, March 7, 2019

The Quarterback Carousel Continues in Washington

Smart football decisions and the Washington Redskins are words that do not coincide. Instead of drafting a rookie quarterback next month, or even trading for Josh Rosen—the 10th overall selection in the 2018 NFL draft—the Redskins elected to make a head-scratching move.

(Photo: NFL.com)
Case Keenum is being shipped from Denver to D.C. along with a seventh-round pick, and in return, the Broncos receive a sixth-rounder from the Redskins. Both picks are for next year's draft. Denver will pay $3.5 million of Keenum's $7 million salary, while the Redskins pay the remaining half.

Keenum, 31, will compete with incumbent signal-caller Colt McCoy for the starting role as of now. Neither one of these names sends a warning message to the rest of the NFC East. If anything, this screams mediocrity and a regression to the old Redskins ways of conducting business.

Since entering the league as an undrafted free agent in 2012, Keenum has been with five teams, including the Redskins. His career statistics include 12,661 passing yards, 64 touchdowns, and 42 interceptions.

Add his name to the eye-popping list of starting quarterbacks in the nation's capital.